[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 29 (Monday, July 26, 1999)]
[Page 1466]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to the Overflow Crowd at Lansing Community College

July 22, 1999

    Thank you for coming today. I wish we'd had room for everybody at 
the other place, but you are much cooler than we were. [Laughter] And I 
hope you enjoyed the event, even long distance.
    I was very impressed with the people who spoke, and I think it will 
be very effective in trying to make the point we're trying to make. And 
I'm not going to make another speech, but I'm curious--how many students 
are here? [Applause] One of the things that I'm proudest of that we've 
accomplished in this Congress is, after the Balanced Budget Act, we've 
passed this HOPE scholarship which gives a $1,500 tax credit for--and I 
hope you're all using it.
    The only other point I want to hammer home that I made today is, it 
is very important when we debate how much should go to a tax cut--should 
we save Social Security and Medicare; should we pay off the debt; that 
we not adopt a budget--as some are up there saying. They're saying, 
``Okay, well, we'll do it your way on Social Security and Medicare, but 
give us a bigger tax cut,'' which would mean we'd actually have to cut 
Federal support for education, which I think would be a terrible 
mistake, because if, for no other reason, the financing of higher 
education--it's absolutely critical.
    But there are a lot of important things we're doing in our 
elementary and secondary schools, too, to try to lower class sizes and 
put more teachers out there and do things like that. So I hope all of 
you will also respond to what I asked the audience over there, which is, 
if you agree with the position we're taking--save Social Security and 
Medicare, invest in education and defense and the environment, have a 
modest tax cut, and pay the debt off--if you agree with that, I hope you 
will communicate that to the Members of the Senate and Congress from 
Michigan. Write them a letter, send them an E-mail, send them a fax, do 
something. It will make a difference.
    I really hope that we can conduct this discussion and bring it to a 
successful conclusion. I don't think that we need to have a 2-year-long 
protracted political battle over this. I think this is a relatively easy 
decision to make if the Congress can be convinced that that's where the 
American people are. And I believe people of all ages think that now we 
have this moment which is once in a lifetime, maybe once in a generation 
opportunity, and we ought to take it and go with it.
    So I thank you for coming, and I'm going to start down here and go 
over here and shake hands with anybody who wants to come by and say 
hello.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 1:50 p.m. in the Dart Auditorium. A tape 
was not available for verification of the content of these remarks.